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Sparring and the Brain: The Associations between Sparring and Regional Brain Volumes in Professional Mixed Martial Arts Fighters.

Aaron I EsagoffNicolas J HeckenlaibleMichael Johnathan Charles BrayAndres PasuizacaBarry R BryantGuogen ShanMatthew E PetersCharles B BernickBharat R Narapareddy
Published in: Sports medicine (Auckland, N.Z.) (2023)
More weekly rounds of sparring was not significantly associated with smaller volumes in any of the brain regions studied in active, professional MMA fighters. Sparring's significant association with larger caudate volume raises questions about whether fighters who spar more experience attenuated trauma-related decreases in caudate volume relative to fighters who spar less, whether fighters who spar more experience minimal or even positive changes to caudate volume, whether baseline differences in caudate size may have mediated results, or whether some other mechanism may be at play. Given limitations inherent to the cross-sectional study design, more research is needed to further explore the brain effects of sparring in MMA.
Keyphrases
  • resting state
  • white matter
  • cross sectional
  • functional connectivity
  • cerebral ischemia